> -Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
> Von: Mark Lanett [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Gesendet: Sonntag, 30. September 2001 17:36
> An: Christian Schoenebeck
> Cc: Debian Mailing-List (E-Mail)
> Betreff: Re: DNS forwarding
>
> My guess is that your intranet boxes are p
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject:Re: DNS forwarding
From: Robert Waldner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date sent: Sat, 29 Sep 2001 23:40:00 +0200
Forwarded by: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Date forwarded: S
From: "Robert Waldner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Can your DNS-forwarder resolve reverse-dns for your internal IPs?
> Reverse-lookup is the most likely candidate for delays I can think of.
I agree. I solved this all with djbdns but it is convoluted. I created two
aliased IPs on my internal interface (
From: "Christian Schoenebeck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> What do you mean with 'broken DNS entries on the intranet boxes'?
My guess is that your intranet boxes are pointed to multiple DNS servers.
They contact the first and it times out, then they contact your new DNS
server (which works).
~mark
-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: Mark Lanett [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Gesendet: Samstag, 29. September 2001 23:23
An: Christian Schoenebeck; Debian Mailing-List (E-Mail)
Betreff: Re: DNS forwarding
> For dns caching, I would say use dnscache from djbdns instead. However
> running
On Sat, 29 Sep 2001 21:53:26 +0200, "Christian Schoenebeck" writes:
>I configured one Debian box as an internet router for our local network,
>but I've got a little problem with DNS. I installed bind 8.1x
bind 8._1_? <*gasp*> Upgrade, please. Upgrade. 8.2.3 is the
security-wise recommended one.
entries on the intranet boxes.
~mark
From: "Christian Schoenebeck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> as described in the DNS-HOWTO. Now it works, but it takes a long
> time (about 10 or more seconds) till the clients get their answers to
their
> DNS queries. So, isn't there
time (about 10 or more seconds) till the clients get their answers to their
DNS queries. So, isn't there a simpler program just for DNS forwarding?
Because DNS works very fast on the internet router itself. Because it
always uses DNS servers from the actual ISP. If I try to ping what DNS
a
On Sun, Sep 17, 2000 at 08:01:42PM +0200, Jonas Moberg wrote:
> I noticed this article about securing your box over at rootprompt
> (http://www.rootprompt.org/article.php3?article=903). It mentioned
> tcpserver and dnscache by D. J. Bernstein which seemed to do
> pretty much what I want.
what a
I'd like to setup my internet router for my local network
to act as a dns-cache and dns-forwarder. I've managed to get
bind to work that way. But I'd feel much happier if I could run
something smaller, less complicated and for my task more secure.
I suppose I could firewall external connections,
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